Development of an environmental DNA metabarcoding assay for aquatic vascular plant communities

Abstract Environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcodes allow for the simultaneous detection of multiple taxa if the barcode regions meet several key requirements including conserved primer‐binding sites, interspecific variability that exceeds intraspecific variability, and relatively short amplicons. Curren...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Stephanie A. Coghlan, Aaron B. A. Shafer, Joanna R. Freeland
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-03-01
Series:Environmental DNA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/edn3.120
id doaj-de614719030b4f26ae4c43a10f080309
record_format Article
spelling doaj-de614719030b4f26ae4c43a10f0803092021-03-16T15:53:10ZengWileyEnvironmental DNA2637-49432021-03-013237238710.1002/edn3.120Development of an environmental DNA metabarcoding assay for aquatic vascular plant communitiesStephanie A. Coghlan0Aaron B. A. Shafer1Joanna R. Freeland2Environmental and Life Sciences Graduate Program Trent University Peterborough ON CanadaEnvironmental and Life Sciences Graduate Program Trent University Peterborough ON CanadaEnvironmental and Life Sciences Graduate Program Trent University Peterborough ON CanadaAbstract Environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcodes allow for the simultaneous detection of multiple taxa if the barcode regions meet several key requirements including conserved primer‐binding sites, interspecific variability that exceeds intraspecific variability, and relatively short amplicons. Currently, there are no established metabarcoding assays for aquatic vascular plants, which could limit biodiversity assessments and the early detection of alien species. We used a combination of novel and pre‐existing primers to generate eDNA metabarcodes from three gene regions that are commonly used for plant barcoding: two regions of chloroplast DNA (rbcL and matK) plus a segment of an internal transcribed spacer (ITS2). We optimized the assay on a mock community of 25 known species and then applied it to wild samples collected from two waterbodies in southern Ontario, Canada (Black River and Seymour Lake). Our novel rbcL primers, which amplify a fragment of ~220 bp, provided the most comprehensive description of the mock community, identifying all but one of the taxa to species or genus. In addition, after pooling data from five sites within each sampled waterbody, metabarcodes generated by this same primer pair identified more taxa than all other primer pairs; more specifically, 20 and 26 taxa were identified from Black River and Seymour Lake, respectively, to species or genus. Across the two sites, nine of the identified taxa are alien invasive aquatic plants. Five of these invasive species have no previous reports from our sites, and in some cases have no known established Ontario populations; our data therefore suggest an urgent need to increase surveillance for these aliens. Overall, our study showed that eDNA metabarcoding with a novel rbcL primer pair provides a cost‐effective method for simultaneously detecting multiple aquatic vascular plant taxa and is a valuable tool for the early detection of invasive species.https://doi.org/10.1002/edn3.120aquatic plantsbiodiversitychloroplast DNAhigh‐throughput sequencinginternal transcribed spacermatK
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stephanie A. Coghlan
Aaron B. A. Shafer
Joanna R. Freeland
spellingShingle Stephanie A. Coghlan
Aaron B. A. Shafer
Joanna R. Freeland
Development of an environmental DNA metabarcoding assay for aquatic vascular plant communities
Environmental DNA
aquatic plants
biodiversity
chloroplast DNA
high‐throughput sequencing
internal transcribed spacer
matK
author_facet Stephanie A. Coghlan
Aaron B. A. Shafer
Joanna R. Freeland
author_sort Stephanie A. Coghlan
title Development of an environmental DNA metabarcoding assay for aquatic vascular plant communities
title_short Development of an environmental DNA metabarcoding assay for aquatic vascular plant communities
title_full Development of an environmental DNA metabarcoding assay for aquatic vascular plant communities
title_fullStr Development of an environmental DNA metabarcoding assay for aquatic vascular plant communities
title_full_unstemmed Development of an environmental DNA metabarcoding assay for aquatic vascular plant communities
title_sort development of an environmental dna metabarcoding assay for aquatic vascular plant communities
publisher Wiley
series Environmental DNA
issn 2637-4943
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Abstract Environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcodes allow for the simultaneous detection of multiple taxa if the barcode regions meet several key requirements including conserved primer‐binding sites, interspecific variability that exceeds intraspecific variability, and relatively short amplicons. Currently, there are no established metabarcoding assays for aquatic vascular plants, which could limit biodiversity assessments and the early detection of alien species. We used a combination of novel and pre‐existing primers to generate eDNA metabarcodes from three gene regions that are commonly used for plant barcoding: two regions of chloroplast DNA (rbcL and matK) plus a segment of an internal transcribed spacer (ITS2). We optimized the assay on a mock community of 25 known species and then applied it to wild samples collected from two waterbodies in southern Ontario, Canada (Black River and Seymour Lake). Our novel rbcL primers, which amplify a fragment of ~220 bp, provided the most comprehensive description of the mock community, identifying all but one of the taxa to species or genus. In addition, after pooling data from five sites within each sampled waterbody, metabarcodes generated by this same primer pair identified more taxa than all other primer pairs; more specifically, 20 and 26 taxa were identified from Black River and Seymour Lake, respectively, to species or genus. Across the two sites, nine of the identified taxa are alien invasive aquatic plants. Five of these invasive species have no previous reports from our sites, and in some cases have no known established Ontario populations; our data therefore suggest an urgent need to increase surveillance for these aliens. Overall, our study showed that eDNA metabarcoding with a novel rbcL primer pair provides a cost‐effective method for simultaneously detecting multiple aquatic vascular plant taxa and is a valuable tool for the early detection of invasive species.
topic aquatic plants
biodiversity
chloroplast DNA
high‐throughput sequencing
internal transcribed spacer
matK
url https://doi.org/10.1002/edn3.120
work_keys_str_mv AT stephanieacoghlan developmentofanenvironmentaldnametabarcodingassayforaquaticvascularplantcommunities
AT aaronbashafer developmentofanenvironmentaldnametabarcodingassayforaquaticvascularplantcommunities
AT joannarfreeland developmentofanenvironmentaldnametabarcodingassayforaquaticvascularplantcommunities
_version_ 1724219711255740416